In this Nov. 2005 file photo, public information director Larry Greene is shown in the death chamber at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville, Ohio. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato, File)

(Newser)
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Tennessee officials plan to execute a record number of death row inmates over the next two years, all under a cloak of secrecy. The state late last year asked its Supreme Court for permission to execute at least a dozen convicts—its biggest request ever—and intends to use a law passed last year that would keep the details under wraps, Raw Story reports. Among those details that wouldn't be revealed: the executioner, the drug cocktail used, or where it was sourced from. The Tennessean reports 10 have execution dates set, between April 2014 and November 2015.

Why seek so many executions now (since 1960, Tennessee has seen only six executions)? Likely because the cases backed up over death-penalty legal challenges and drug shortages, analysts say. "I think what happened is, is the pipe has been cleared," said a pro-death penalty advocate. Specifically, the state halted executions when it ran out of sodium thiopental in 2011, and has now acquired a contentious lethal-injection drug called pentobarbital. As for the secrecy law, other states (like Missouri, Georgia, and Oklahoma) have approved similar legislation to shield the details about their lethal-injection drugs. Some Tennessee inmate attorneys are suing to stop the executions over doubts about the drug, and the Times Free Press notes that similar challenges have delayed Tennessee executions before, sometimes for years.

What bothers me about this story is the state government secrecy part. Government transparency would lend to better credibility when an execution is planned. Secrecy only suggests you are trying to cover something up and it will lead to even more challenges from the critics of the death penalty.

troy705

Mar 24, 2014 8:10 AM CDT

My favorite cowboy movie line. Yea you get a fair trial then we hang you.